Wednesday, December 28, 2016

It's like once we know what we like, we want every single class to meet our pretty little laced-up standards- nothing more, nothing less. We create formulas around this stuff and base our teacher/studio score card accordingly. This much stretching, this much talking, this much alignment correction, this much background music played at this particular time and only this kind of music and at this exact volume level. Oh, and I want a cool lavender towel at the end, please.

Multiply this by 20 and that's a yoga class for you.

Welcome to teaching yoga in America.

But none of these high standards are said out loud, most of the time. So I couldn't help but laugh a little bit in my head when this woman expressed her yoga rules to me. I don't know, I felt an odd connection to her in a way, because of her honesty about it all. The rules no one else says but everyone thinks in class, especially when they are regulars.

Our expectations are heavy.

And I think there is an underlying fear beneath some of that.

That no one will ever quite please us in the way we want.

That we will never be received in the way we want to be received.

Never fully understood.

What is that?

I think more than anything, it speaks to this deep human need: the need to be heard, seen, and even experienced in all the right ways.

It's an instinctive cry to the deepest canyons of the earth. "SEE ME! I AM HERE. And I DESERVE to be seen." Therefore, I have standards- in how you teach me, look at me, talk to me, notice me, listen to me, and even think about me.

So maybe other teachers might have called this woman high-maintenance, but I understood her.

And I could relate.

I walked in to the studio room a few minutes before class to
check the heat and the status of the room and she was whispering to another
student about my teaching practices, to make sure I was the right fit.

"I am picky about my teachers," she smiled back at me when I accidentally walked into their conversation. (But really, they stood right by the door, in the perfect space to be interrupted, so I didn't apologize).

“You should be picky about your teacher,” I encouraged her. “That’s how I am when I practice.”

And I was serious. Sometimes I am too picky about those things. When it really is just yoga and I really am just a human on my mat, seeking authentic connection with my breath.

Even in the simple things, we have such high expectations.

This woman's eyes are a deep hazel brown. Whisker-like wrinkles outline the outside of her eyes, the kind that invite you in with caution, once she liked you, of course. And that took time, I could tell.

I watched the woman lay down her mat with meticulous care, in a protective way, like a mother setting her newborn baby down in her crib. I could tell this woman wanted to trust me. But she hadn't quite figured me out yet, and she didn't know how to, really.

I could feel the questions swirling around her, almost bumping into each other, like bumper cars at the county fair.

Is she safe?

Is she correct?

Is she modern?

Traditional?

And at what level?

Where did she get her training?

And what kind of training?

Is she going to force me to do something I don't want to?

How strict is she?

After class, I spoke with her a bit more and she smiled at me and her eyes smiled too. And I heard an accent in her voice, one that I couldn’t quite name but was drawn to.

"I had to skip some of the postures and lie down, but that's good too, right?" she asked, already knowing the answer, almost testing me, it seemed. But she seemed at ease, more comfortable with me now.

"Yes, definitely," I said back with a bit of caution, but this time, knowing she liked me too, at least a little. And I felt my shoulders sit a little deeper instead of hunching near my ears where they don't belong but where they sneakily climb to when I am uncomfortable. With the same happy eyes, thankful for this closer connection to this beautiful, wise teacher, I affirmed. "Yes, you needed that."

Little girls at schools all across this fine city have
braided my hair and scoffed at my head full of tangles.

I have babysat and tucked kids in to bed at practically
every city zip code.

I have voted several times here- once for a mayor who was
elected and now comes to my yoga classes on the reg.

My car tires have burned MILES of rubber against these back
roads, highways, and interstates.

I have passed the same trees countless times without even
realizing it.

I wonder what these trees have noticed about me or my car or
my addiction to staying busy.

I have used the Wifi of SO MANY cafes and coffee shops here.

I have said hello and goodbye to so many friends that
have moved away.

Seen so many moving trucks in driveways.

Couches and chairs getting stacked together like a puzzle.
I've given hugs and said phrases like, “Safe travels. See you
soon”.

Phrases that roll off my tongue from habit, but this time, with a shaky voice and a
wrinkle in between my eyebrows.

I have cried with so many here.

Laughed with so many here.

Drunk wine with so many here.

This city has watched me grow up, and I mean that in the
most honest, most authentic way possible, and if I said that outloud in the right
place at the right time, it would come with a shaky voice and a wrinkle in
between my eyebrows.

This city has watched me switch jobs.

A LOT.

It has watched me create traditions and projects and dreams.

It has watched me change addresses four times.

Create a nonprofit.

Become a yogi and a yoga teacher and crave the four
corners of my mat like they are my lifeline to sanity.

I came with a college degree.

Now I have a Masters.

I met a boy at a summer camp who is now a man that I love, four
and a half years later.

I came with a locked-down faith from a committed Southern
girl who attended church every Sunday because that was the “right thing to do”.

I came with a script, y’all.

Little did I know, these beautiful
six years would present me with more questions than I even knew were possible.

Little did I know that I would kind of love that, and accept
that, and not be afraid of the questions or the doubt, or Lord-behold, the raw,
reliable mystery of it all.

I moved here because Denver didn’t work out.

We broke up, I got angry, I escaped and started over as fast
as I could so I wouldn’t have to feel anything.

I moved here without a job.

Just ready to get out of Alabama and be a stranger in a new
place.

Here’s the thing- I do not hold this city, or any city, to perfection, measuring its
every ounce just right, calculating its ingredients of diversity, affordable
housing, and career opportunities time and time again, with sweaty hands and a
racing heart.

I am growing, and so is this city.

I am making mistakes and cherishing life and getting older,
and so is this city.

Sunday, October 23, 2016

I am wearing flannel today, so it officially feels like
fall. The sky is cloudy and gray and yes, in Nashville, that makes it even more
official: Colder weather is coming. I must say, though, this early morning chill
at my shoulders is oddly welcoming.

I am ready, I think.

Fall means new beginnings, change, transition. The brigher
the leaves turn, the more this is confirmed: Change is coming.

I notice it in my body. My chest feels less stable, less
rooted, like hot steam rising from a whistling tea kettle. Thin, almost
invisible, but rising just the same. But ya know? I like the feeling, at least every once in a
while.

The feeling of not knowing what's coming next.

Of not knowing anything,
really.

This is always our human state but fall makes it more real, it
seems.

Fall is like a tiny whisper of promise delivered with hope,
wonder, magic. Her promise carried with the powerful magnetic confidence of a
curly-haired three year old with bright eyes and a voice of song, play, and
wild imagination.

In the back of her voice, though, you hear it: that slightly
mischievous and sneaky, "up-to-something" kind of tone. Like the homemade backdrop
of the high school play. You don’t notice it at first but there it is, setting
the perfect scene and laughing when the actors forget their lines.

Fall’s whisper, it says,

“Look out, something’s coming.

Something good.

Something
special.

It’s waiting for you, just sitting on the curbside of October.

The bus
stop of November, ready to get picked up and swept away.

Ready to walk among
the strangers, blend in with the layered smell of skin, with the promises of tomorrow.

When the trees turn gold and the cool breeze picks up and
the leaves crackle underneath your footsteps on the sidewalk, then you will know it's coming.

Sunday, September 11, 2016

A piece from Writing Group last spring. I know, a late entry. But maybe it falls on the perfect day, the perfect moment... I believe that.

“What is real?” the rabbit asked the Skin Horse in the
attic.

The Skin Horse, in his fatherly, whispery wisdom, explained
to the rabbit that to be real is to be loved.

I am that rabbit.

That Skin Horse is my God.

The horse rocks forward and backward on that wooded,
creaky, little attic floor with spider webs in the corners and rays of sunlight
dancing in.

His voice is like sand: calm, steady, dry. My overly-eager
attempt at a tiny taste of his wisdom almost knocks my weight forward. My hips
move beyond the balls of my feet, and I inch toward the sun rays.

Warmer.

Lighter.

Warmer.

Lighter.

My skin horse tells me that I can be real, that I can be
loved.

Just the way that I am.

My thoughts run like train tracks.

Loud, fast, and wild.

Yet my Skin Horse keeps rocking forward and backward.

Steady breathing, steady voice.

What if I am already real? I wonder.

What if I just never knew it to be true?

My shoulders sink in a little, my chin caves in toward my
chest.

My train track keeps running.

Faster and faster, until my
heart rate matches my thoughts like a reflection in the mirror.

Loud, fast, and wild.

And then I hear it.

“Just be,” my Skin Horse tells me.

His three whisker-like wrinkles lying beside each eyelid thread out in all different directions, like streams leading into the ocean of his calm, peaceful face.

About Me

meeting new people is my heart's delight. i cherish each day because i know there is purpose wrapped up in every waking moment. i love to play in the great outdoors and listen to the music of the sweet birds that call me home.